KENNY JACKETT criticised the Huddersfield players who taunted Lee Trundle after he was sent off - and insisted the home side should have also been reduced to 10 men.

The Swans boss , pictured right, said he could not understand why Town goalkeeper Matt Glennon was not dismissed for bringing down Ian Craney and conceding the penalty from which Trundle opened the scoring.

And, though Jackett said he did not see the elbowing incident that earned Trundle a red card, he was annoyed to see his star striker being wound up by Peter Jackson's men as he left the pitch.

"Lee was fuming in the dressing room, but I didn't see the incident so I'm not sure why the referee sent him off," Jackett said.

"He's a big player in this division and unfortunately people bait him and he has to take that.

"But people were giving him stick as he walked off the pitch - that's a bit unnecessary.

"As for our penalty, I was waiting for Huddersfield's goalkeeper to be sent off.

"I asked the fourth official why he wasn't sent off and he said Craney wasn't in a goal-scoring position. But it seemed to be the most clear goal-scoring opportunity he could have had.

"He touched it past the keeper and it would've been a left-foot roll into the back of the net."

On Swansea's collapse, Jackett said, "It was a rollercoaster of a game which unfortunately didn't fall our way.